Purely for the sake of nostalgia, I'd like to virtualize a couple old versions of Debian. For this example, I'll use 2.2.

2.2 (Potato) has XFree86 v3.3.6. In VMware Player 4 I can successfully use the provided SCSI controller, NIC, and possibly the sound (not sure if old kernels have the necessary driver). Can't find the needed video driver, so it works fine in console mode but it'd be fun to run X on it as well.

I don't think I was quite so successful with Virtualbox; it might have been something with the emulated IDE controller, but I don't think it would boot. Sound should be easier to do (VB can emulate an SB16, which Linux 2.2 and 2.4 had drivers for), but again, forget about the video.

Any suggestions? Microsoft Virtual PC emulates actual video hardware (S3 Trio 64) but I've heard it doesn't like Linux so much. I seem to recall that VMware /used/ to support such old versions of Linux.

Try running an old version of vm-ware More seriously, I used vm-ware back in 2003 with suse linux 9.0 (the old suse not the more recent open Suse). I think there was some svga driver that would do basic X.

Did you try all of the available IDE controller types in VirtualBox? Perhaps the default one is too new for such an old OS. VirtualBox also has the ability to emulate SCSI controllers; that may be worth a try as well.

Edit: And what is the correct plural form of Linux anyway? I've also seen it spelled "Linuces".

The years just pass like trains. I wave, but they don't slow down.-- Steven Wilson

chuckula wrote: I think there was some svga driver that would do basic X.

The vesafb driver should work even for older X. I remember using it to get odd embedded video controllers (The kind with 1mb of vram) to work. It's supposed to be a kind of universal driver as long as the emulator follows it, and I believe vbox and vmware both do from what I can find.

just brew it! wrote:Did you try all of the available IDE controller types in VirtualBox? Perhaps the default one is too new for such an old OS. VirtualBox also has the ability to emulate SCSI controllers; that may be worth a try as well.

It sees the SCSI controller when it emulates a BusLogic type, and will boot off the ISO (can't attach CD to a SCSI controller, so it's IDE, have tried all 3 types), but after a certain point it will say

Kernel panic: VFS: unable mount root fs on 01:00

Same deal if the hard drive's attached to the IDE controller. No issue with VMware.

So far I can get VMware to do X in 320x200x8 using the SVGA server, which is obviously sub-optimal. I'm investigating the framebuffer, which I've got compiled into the self-done 2.4.31 kernel, but no luck yet even getting the framebugger to work in console mode, and X just laughs. Maybe I'm missing a necessary ancillary utility.

Must have the xserver-fbdev package installed, then copy the file /usr/share/doc/xserver-fbdev/examples/XF86Config.fbdev to /etc/X11/XF86Config, then edit this file to reflect the color depth you've chosen from the "vga=foo" stanza in /etc/lilo.conf (with vga=791 it's 16 bits (the resolution is 1024x768[1], but that's irrelevant here)) and also edit the mouse information to reflect the correct protocol and device (in my case, device is /dev/gpmdata and the protocol is Microsoft).

[ninja edit: forgot a step HERE]Now you have to edit /etc/X11/Xserver and replace the first line with the path to your FBDev X server; for me it's "/usr/bin/X11/XF86_FBDev".

Now you should have functioning X.

The above works for VMware Player 4.x on Windows 7 and may work on other platforms.

Above will probably work with any version of Linux kernel that supports VESA framebuffer. I don't know the oldest version to support it immediately, but probably all 2.2 kernels and above will have it.